Venerable (Monastic) 6th century

Venerable Dodo of the David-Gareji Monastery

6th century (by some accounts c. 532 – c. 623)

Also known as Dodo of Gareji

A companion of St David of Gareji and one of the Thirteen Syrian Fathers' spiritual heirs, who founded a community of caves in the Gareji wilderness and lived in deep poverty and stillness.

Feast Day
May 17
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.

Life

Dodo of the David-Gareji Monastery was a sixth-century Georgian ascetic and monastic founder, remembered as one of the principal disciples of Saint David of Gareji and a spiritual heir of the missionary movement begun by the Thirteen Assyrian (Syrian) Fathers in the Kingdom of Iberia (Georgia). According to the synaxarion he was tonsured a monk while still a youth and was endowed with every virtue, pursuing a life marked by deep poverty and stillness.

Before joining David, Dodo labored as a hermit at Ninotsminda in the Kakheti region of eastern Georgia. Having learned of David's miraculous works, he was drawn to the Gareji wilderness, where he became David's companion and helped develop the monastic settlement hollowed from the rock of Mount Gareja. Together with David's disciple Lukiane (Luciane), Dodo expanded the original lavra and founded further monastic communities — among them the cluster that came to bear his name, 'Dodo's Rka' (the horn of Dodo).

He is venerated in the Eastern Orthodox Church; the Georgian and OCA usage commemorates him on May 17, and his feast is also kept on the Wednesday after the Ascension of Christ. No dedicated medieval hagiographic life survives for Dodo apart from the Georgian tradition surrounding David of Gareji, so several biographical particulars — including his approximate birth and death dates — are reported only in later accounts and should be treated as approximate.

Timeline 5 moments Read Hide
  1. c. 532 Birth (by later account) By later tradition, Dodo is born, said to belong to the Georgian noble house of Andronikashvili; he embraces the monastic life from an early age. The date is approximate and reported only in later sources.
  2. Early life Hermit at Ninotsminda Before his association with David, Dodo labors as a hermit at Ninotsminda in the Kakheti region, seeking solitude and poverty.
  3. 6th century Joins David at Gareji Learning of David of Gareji's miraculous works, Dodo travels to the Gareji wilderness, becomes David's companion, and helps develop the rock-hewn monastic settlement.
  4. 6th century Monastic foundations Together with the disciple Lukiane, Dodo expands the original lavra and founds further communities, including 'Dodo's Rka' (the horn of Dodo) and Natlismtsemeli, dedicated to John the Baptist.
  5. c. 623 Repose (by later account) By later tradition his death occurs around 623. The date is approximate; the secure dating of his life is the sixth century.

Contributions & Legacy

4 contributions Read Hide

Background and Early Life

By the account preserved in later sources, Dodo belonged to the Georgian noble house of the Andronikashvili and was born around 532. He embraced the monastic life from an early age, being tonsured while still a youth, and was remembered for his virtuous character and his preference for spiritual simplicity.

His earliest ascetic labors were undertaken as a hermit at Ninotsminda in the Kakheti region of eastern Georgia, where he sought a life of solitude and poverty before his association with David of Gareji.

The Gareji Wilderness and Monastic Foundations

The David-Gareji complex was established in the sixth century by David of Gareji, one of the Thirteen Assyrian (Syrian) Fathers who came to Georgia to strengthen the Christian faith. The site lay in the Kakheti region of eastern Georgia, on the slopes of Mount Gareja, and came to comprise hundreds of cells, churches, chapels, refectories, and living quarters hollowed out of the rock face.

David's disciples were central to the growth of the settlement. Drawn to Gareji after hearing of David's miracles, Dodo joined the community, and together with the disciple Lukiane he expanded the original lavra and founded additional monasteries. These foundations included 'Dodo's Rka' — literally 'the horn of Dodo' — and Natlismtsemeli, dedicated to John the Baptist.

The wider complex continued to develop long after Dodo's lifetime, notably under the ninth-century Georgian saint Hilarion the Iberian, and reached its highest economic and cultural phase in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries with monasteries such as Udabno, Bertubani, and Chichkhituri, whose wall paintings date from the late eleventh to the early thirteenth century.

Veneration and Legacy

Dodo is honored in the Eastern Orthodox Church as a venerable monastic and hermit. The Georgian Orthodox Church venerates him liturgically, and the Church commemorates him with troparia and a kontakion appointed for his feast.

His feast is kept on May 17, and also observed on the Wednesday after the Ascension of Christ. No modern act or document of formal glorification was located in the available sources; his veneration rests on continuous liturgical commemoration within the Georgian tradition.

Sources and Historical Note

The Thirteen Assyrian Fathers, with whom Dodo's monastic lineage is associated through David of Gareji, are documented only in medieval Georgian hagiographic texts, with no external attestation; the number 'thirteen' appears to be largely symbolic. Dodo himself is associated with David of Gareji rather than counted among the Thirteen.

Several details are reported with uncertainty. The dates of birth around 532 and death around 623 derive from a later compiled account and should be treated as approximate; the secure dating is the sixth century. The attribution of the Andronikashvili name to Dodo is preserved in later hagiography, though that family's later claim of descent from Alexios Komnenos is a legendary tradition postdating Dodo by centuries, so the family designation as applied to him may be anachronistic.

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Lives of the Saints